Exam 1 Part 3 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 4 criterias for vowels?

A

Heightness, backness, roundness, tenseness

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2
Q

What are the 2 targets of a diphthong?

A

Nucleus, off-glide

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3
Q

What are syllables consisted of (3)?

A

Onset, nucleus, coda

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4
Q

Vowel or syllabic consonant

A

Nucleus

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5
Q

Segment located left of the nucleus

A

Onset

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6
Q

Segment located right of the nucleus

A

Coda

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7
Q

What makes up a rhyme?

A

Nucleus and coda

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8
Q

What are the 2 principles on how syllables are formed?

A

Require a nucleus, onsets preferred over codas

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9
Q

Set of constraints on which segments can occur together

A

phontactics

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10
Q

If two sounds are said to be in overlapping environments, this is what type of variation?

A

Unpredictable variation

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11
Q

If two allophones [g] and [k] are said to be contrastive in a language, what is the relationship between these allophones and their phoneme(s)?

A

Allophones of separate phonemes

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12
Q

If two allophones [t] and [ɾ] are said to in complementary distribution in a language, what is the relationship between these allophones and their phoneme(s)?

A

Allophones of the same phoneme

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13
Q

If two sounds are predictable, but not strictly based on phonological factor(s), this is what type of variation?

A

Free variation

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14
Q

This type of breathing is most often used for producing speech.

A

Exhalation

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15
Q

These are the four active articulators in the supralarygeal system

A

mandible, lips, tongue and velum

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16
Q

When the vocal folds are completely abducted, this is what state of the glottis.

A

open; voiceless

17
Q

This is the passageway that is opened when the velum is lowered to produce nasalized segments.

A

Nasal pharyngeal region

18
Q

What are the criteria that define the consonant system

A

Place, matter, glottal state

19
Q

In terms of articulation, this is the main difference between a monophthong and a diphthong.

A

One target vs two target

20
Q

What is one problem with the IPA consonant model?

A

consonants that are articulated with a secondary articulator

21
Q

This is the main articulatory difference between an oral and a nasal stop

A

Position of the velum

22
Q

When constructing a syllable, phonotactic constraints should be applied most critically during this step of the process.

A

Assigning the onset

23
Q

These cannot stand on there one and but must be used in conjunction with segmental units.

A

Diacritic

24
Q

Both paralinguistics and prosody are grouped under this over-arching concept.

A

Suprasegmentals

25
Q

Only these two classes of consonants are syllabified using the syllabification diacritic.

A

Liquids and nasal

26
Q

Why do we use diacritics?

A

What is simplification, modification or addition of prosodic elements

27
Q

This unit of speech is strictly stored in the mind of the speaker and is never produced.

A

Phoneme